I'm trying to send a variable from the ViewModel as a parameter to a command. The command looks like this:
public class EditPersonCommand : ICommand
{
private bool _CanExecute = false;
public bool CanExecute(object parameter)
{
PersonModel p = parameter as PersonModel;
CanExecuteProperty = (p != null) && (p.Age > 0);
return CanExecuteProperty;
}
public event EventHandler CanExecuteChanged;
public void Execute(object parameter) { }
private bool CanExecuteProperty
{
get { return _CanExecute; }
set
{
if (_CanExecute != value)
{
_CanExecute = value;
EventHandler can_execute = CanExecuteChanged;
if (can_execute != null)
{
can_execute.Invoke(this, EventArgs.Empty);
}
}
}
}
}
The ViewModel looks like this:
public class PersonViewModel : ViewModelBase
{
private PersonModel _PersonModel;
private EditPersonCommand _EditPersonCommand;
///<remarks>
/// must use the parameterless constructor to satisfy <Window.Resources>
///</remarks>
public PersonViewModel()
: this(new PersonModel())
{
}
public PersonViewModel(PersonModel personModel)
{
_PersonModel = personModel;
}
public ICommand EditPersonCommand
{
get
{
if (_EditPersonCommand == null)
{
_EditPersonCommand = new EditPersonCommand();
}
return _EditPersonCommand;
}
}
}
The xaml looks like this:
<Button Content="Edit" HorizontalAlignment="Right" Height="20" Width="80"
Command="{Binding EditPersonCommand}"
CommandParameter="{Binding _PersonModel}" />
I've tried creating a property in the ViewModel instead of using the private local variable name, but that didnt work either. The object parameter
always shows null
in the call to CanExecute
and the button is never enabled. If I change the CommandParameter
value to Hello
, then I receive Hello
in the call to CanExecute
, so I'm not sure why the variable doesnt work. Any help would be appreciated.
Update: I've also tried making a public property to the model (which I dont really want to expose the model, but just tried it to see if it works, but it doesnt).
// Added this to the ViewModel
public PersonModel PersonModelProp
{
get
{
return _PersonModel;
}
set
{
_PersonModel = value;
OnPropertyChanged("PersonModelProp");
}
}
And changed the xaml to this:
<Button Content="Edit" HorizontalAlignment="Right" Height="20" Width="80"
Command="{Binding EditPersonCommand}"
CommandParameter="{Binding PersonModelProp}" />
But still no luck. The ViewModel does implement INotifyPropertyChanged
Is the CommandParameter always null or are you only checking the first time it is being executed?
It appears that the order in which you declare your properties matters in this case since setting the Command property causes the CanExecute to fire immediately before the CommandParameter has been set.
Try moving the CommandParameter property before the Command property:
<Button Content="Edit" HorizontalAlignment="Right" Height="20" Width="80"
CommandParameter="{Binding PersonModelProp}"
Command="{Binding EditPersonCommand}" />
Also, see here and here.
Edit
To ensure that your events are being raised properly you should raise the CanExecuteChanged event when the PersonModelProp
value changes.
The Command:
public class EditPersonCommand : ICommand
{
public bool CanExecute(object parameter)
{
PersonModel p = parameter as PersonModel;
return p != null && p.Age > 0;
}
public event EventHandler CanExecuteChanged;
public void Execute(object parameter)
{
//command implementation
}
public void RaiseCanExecuteChanged()
{
var handler = CanExecuteChanged;
if(handler != null)
{
handler(this, EventArgs.Empty);
}
}
}
And the view model:
public class PersonViewModel : ViewModelBase
{
private PersonModel _PersonModel;
private EditPersonCommand _EditPersonCommand;
///<remarks>
/// must use the parameterless constructor to satisfy <Window.Resources>
///</remarks>
public PersonViewModel()
: this(new PersonModel())
{
_EditPersonCommand = new EditPersonCommand();
}
public PersonViewModel(PersonModel personModel)
{
_PersonModel = personModel;
}
public ICommand EditPersonCommand
{
get
{
return _EditPersonCommand;
}
}
public PersonModel PersonModelProp
{
get
{
return _PersonModel;
}
set
{
_PersonModel = value;
OnPropertyChanged("PersonModelProp");
EditPersonCommand.RaiseCanExecuteChanged();
}
}
}
Two points to the answer:
First, as @akton mentioned, you can only bind to public properties. It doesn't have to be a DependencyProperty though.
Second, which took me some tome to figure out, is that you have to set the binding for the CommandParameter before the Command property. i.e.
<Button Content="Edit" HorizontalAlignment="Right" Height="20" Width="80"
CommandParameter="{Binding PersonModelProp}"
Command="{Binding EditPersonCommand}" />
Hope this helps :)
_PersonModel
is private and so cannot be accessed. Create a public property that exposes it and bind to that in the CommandParameter
. Remember to make the property a dependency property (technically not required but it helps) and the ViewModel should implement INotifyProperty changed and fire the PropertyChanged event so the binding is updated.
I think you have a problem in your EditPersonCommand (it not fired ok).I check it with relayCommand and it work!
This is the code:
ViewModel:
public class PersonViewModel : ViewModelBase
{
private PersonModel _PersonModel;
private ICommand _EditPersonCommand;
///<remarks>
/// must use the parameterless constructor to satisfy <Window.Resources>
///</remarks>
public PersonViewModel()
: this(new PersonModel())
{
}
public PersonViewModel(PersonModel personModel)
{
PersonModelProp = personModel;
}
public ICommand EditPersonCommand
{
get
{
if (_EditPersonCommand == null)
{
_EditPersonCommand = new RelayCommand(ExecuteEditPerson,CanExecuteEditPerson);
}
return _EditPersonCommand;
}
}
private bool CanExecuteEditPerson(object parameter)
{
PersonModel p = parameter as PersonModel;
return (p != null) && (p.Age > 0);
}
private void ExecuteEditPerson(object o)
{
}
public PersonModel PersonModelProp
{
get
{
return _PersonModel;
}
set
{
_PersonModel = value;
NotifyPropertyChanged("PersonModelProp");
}
}
}
And this RelayCommand (Fire events ok!)
public class RelayCommand : ICommand
{
#region Constants and Fields
private readonly Predicate<object> canExecute;
private readonly Action<object> execute;
#endregion
#region Constructors and Destructors
public RelayCommand(Action<object> execute)
: this(execute, null)
{
}
public RelayCommand(Action<object> execute, Predicate<object> canExecute)
{
if (execute == null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException("execute");
}
this.execute = execute;
this.canExecute = canExecute;
}
#endregion
#region Events
public event EventHandler CanExecuteChanged
{
add
{
CommandManager.RequerySuggested += value;
}
remove
{
CommandManager.RequerySuggested -= value;
}
}
#endregion
#region Implemented Interfaces
#region ICommand
[DebuggerStepThrough]
public bool CanExecute(object parameter)
{
return this.canExecute == null || this.canExecute(parameter);
}
public void Execute(object parameter)
{
this.execute(parameter);
}
#endregion
#endregion
}
Xmal:
<Button Content="Edit" HorizontalAlignment="Right" Height="20" Width="80"
CommandParameter="{Binding PersonModelProp}"
Command="{Binding EditPersonCommand}" />